| Destination | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| El Nido, Palawan | ||||||||||||
| Coron, Palawan | ||||||||||||
| Boracay | ||||||||||||
| Siargao | ||||||||||||
| Cebu | ||||||||||||
| Bohol | ||||||||||||
| Palawan (general) | ||||||||||||
| Manila | ||||||||||||
| Camiguin |
El Nido, Palawan
Driest and calmest seas Nov–Apr — ideal for island hopping. Jul–Sep brings habagat rains and rougher boat trips.
Coron, Palawan
Clear water for wreck diving and lagoons Nov–May. Avoid peak rainy Jul–Sep.
Boracay
White Beach is calmest in the amihan (Nov–Apr). Kitesurfers prefer the windier Dec–Feb on Bulabog Beach.
Siargao
Prime surf swell Aug–Nov (Cloud 9 season). Calmer, sunnier for non-surfers Mar–Jun.
Cebu
Dry, sunny Dec–May for canyoneering at Kawasan and whale-shark season in Oslob. Sinulog festival is mid-January.
Bohol
Chocolate Hills are greenest Jul–Oct but brownest (and most photogenic) Feb–May, which is also the driest.
Palawan (general)
The whole province is best in the dry season Nov–Apr. Puerto Princesa Underground River runs year-round.
Manila
Coolest and driest Dec–Feb. Jul–Sep can flood during heavy monsoon. A transit hub rather than a beach stop.
Camiguin
Driest Feb–May. The Lanzones Festival (sweet fruit) is in October.
Seasons are general guidance. The Philippines has a dry season (roughly Nov–May) and a wet/habagat season (Jun–Oct), with typhoons most likely Jul–Oct. Always check the forecast before booking ferries or island-hopping. Looking for trips? Browse tours or plan your trip.
Timing is everything in the Philippines
With 7,000+ islands spread across a long archipelago, the Philippines doesn't have a single "best" season — it has two big ones, and they play out differently region by region. Get the timing right and you land on glassy seas, clear water and reliable island-hopping. Get it wrong and you risk cancelled ferries and rained-out lagoons. Here's how to read the calendar.
The two seasons at a glance
Locals talk in terms of two monsoons. Knowing which one you're travelling in tells you almost everything about weather, crowds and price.
November – May
Cool, dry northeast winds bring sunshine, calm seas and the best visibility for diving and lagoons. This is peak travel: prices climb and the headline beaches get busy, especially Dec–Apr. Weather risk is low, value is lower.
- ☀️ Best weather & calmest water
- 👥 Biggest crowds (esp. Dec, Holy Week)
- 💸 Highest prices
June – October
The southwest monsoon brings warm, humid air and rain — often in short heavy bursts rather than all-day grey. Typhoons are most likely Jul–Oct. The upside: the lowest prices of the year, empty beaches, and lush green landscapes. Stay flexible.
- 🌧️ Afternoon downpours, possible typhoons
- 🏝️ Quiet beaches, best surf (Siargao)
- 💰 Lowest prices & most availability
Best time, region by region
The national pattern bends locally. Here's when each headline destination is at its best — and why.
Palawan (El Nido & Coron)
The big lagoons of El Nido and Coron need calm, clear water to shine. The dry months bring flat seas, good visibility for the wrecks, and reliable island-hopping. Boats often get cancelled in the Aug–Oct peak rains.
See destination guide →Boracay
White Beach is at its glassy best in the amihan dry season. Expect sun, gentle water on the main beach, and the liveliest crowds around Dec–Apr. Sept–Oct is the quietest and cheapest, but bring a rain jacket.
See destination guide →Siargao (surf!)
Surf and beach seasons are opposites here. Cloud 9 fires on the biggest, most consistent swells from late August into November. If you just want sun and lagoons rather than barrels, the calmer Mar–May window is friendlier.
See destination guide →Cebu & the Visayas
Moalboal sardines, Oslob, Kawasan Falls and Malapascua thresher dives all favour the dry, calm months. The central Visayas sit in a relatively sheltered belt, so the shoulder months still work well for value.
See destination guide →Bohol
Chocolate Hills, the Loboc River and Panglao's beaches are best under dry-season skies. The famous hills actually turn brown (hence chocolate) toward the end of the dry season around Mar–May.
See destination guide →Insider timing tips
When to go: common questions
What is the overall best time to visit the Philippines?
For most travellers, the dry season from late November to May is ideal — calm seas, sunny skies and the best island-hopping conditions nationwide. March and April are the warmest and busiest; November and early December offer a great balance of dry weather and lower crowds.
When is the cheapest time to go?
The wet season (June to October) and the September–October low point bring the cheapest flights and stays, though you trade off more rain and the chance of typhoons. Shoulder weeks in late November and early June often combine low prices with mostly dry weather.
When should I visit Siargao for surfing?
Siargao's surf season runs roughly August to November, when Cloud 9 and the other reef breaks get their biggest, most consistent swells. If you want calm water for lagoons and beaches instead, aim for March to May.
Is it worth visiting during the rainy season?
Yes, with the right expectations. Rain often comes in short afternoon bursts rather than all day, prices are at their lowest, and sheltered regions like Palawan stay relatively dry. Keep your itinerary flexible and build in a buffer day per sea crossing in case ferries are suspended.
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